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Dive into the research topics where Paul Alagidede is active.

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Featured researches published by Paul Alagidede.


Journal of International Trade & Economic Development | 2011

Causal Relationship between Stock Prices and Exchange Rates

Paul Alagidede; Theodore Panagiotidis; Xu Zhang

This article investigates the nature of the causal linkage between stock markets and foreign exchange markets in Australia, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, and UK from January 1992 to December 2005. Recently developed cointegration tests are employed and no evidence of a long-run relationship between the variables is found. Three variations of the Granger causality test are carried out and causality from exchange rates to stock prices is found for Canada, Switzerland, and UK; weak causality in the other direction is found only for Switzerland. The Hiemstra–Jones test is used to examine possible non-linear causality and the results indicate causality from stock prices to exchange rates in Japan and weak causality of the reverse direction in Switzerland.


Applied Economics Letters | 2011

Why a diversified portfolio should include African assets

Paul Alagidede; Theodore Panagiotidis; Xu Zhang

We employ parametric and nonparametric cointegration approaches to investigate the extent of integration between African stock markets and the rest of the world. Long-run correlation estimates imply very low association between these two. The two distinct cointegration approaches confirm the latter through recursive estimation. The implication is that global markets have little impact on African stock markets. However, including African assets in a mean-variance portfolio would be beneficial to international investors.


Journal of Developing Areas | 2018

Currency Substitution And Stability Of Money Demand In Ghana

George Tweneboah; Paul Alagidede

Monetary policymakers and economists in Ghana have become very disconcerted about the policy implications of the widespread demand for and gradual shift to the use of foreign currency in the economy in recent years. The question of whether the mounting trend of dollarization provides evidence of currency substitution has remained an empirical quest. The purpose is to empirically establish whether the data provides evidence of currency substitution. The method employed models a long-run money demand function within the portfolio balance framework, which distinguishes between capital mobility and currency substitution and also accounts for the pre and post inflation targeting monetary policy regime. The estimation technique follows the cointegration and error correction framework using the Autoregressive Distributed Lag model for annual data from 1960–2013. The variables used are real money balances (defined in both narrow and broad terms) and real income, domestic interest rates, foreign interest rates, and exchange rates. The study reports that there is a stable long-run relationship between real money balances and the determinants. The results highlight that the income elasticity for narrow money is close to one but less than unity for broad money. The coefficient of the interest rate variable is negative for narrow money but positive for broad money pointing out differences in the definition of the two categories of money. Also, whereas the coefficient for returns on foreign bonds is negative for both narrow and broad monetary aggregates, the exchange rate variable remains positive throughout. The findings reveal that, although there is no empirical evidence to support currency substitution, exchange rates and foreign interest rates are significant factors in the domestic money demand dynamics. The validity of foreign interest rate and/or the expected depreciation of the domestic currency in the long-run money demand equation capture the existence of capital mobility. The implication is that domestic agents use foreign currencies together with the domestic currency, although the domestic currency remains the legal tender for domestic transactions. The results underscore the importance of developments in foreign interest rates and exchange rates for fiscal, monetary, and exchange rate policies in Ghana. The policy implications of these findings have been deliberated to provide a guide for policy choices in the emerging economy.


International Review of Financial Analysis | 2009

Modelling stock returns in Africa's emerging equity markets

Paul Alagidede; Theodore Panagiotidis


Review of Financial Economics | 2010

Can Common Stocks Provide A Hedge Against Inflation? Evidence from African Countries

Paul Alagidede; Theodore Panagiotidis


The Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance | 2011

Return behaviour in Africa's emerging equity markets

Paul Alagidede


International journal of business and economics | 2008

Nominal Exchange Rates and Price Convergence in the West African Monetary Zone

Paul Alagidede; George Tweneboah; Anokye M. Adam


African Finance Journal | 2009

Are African Stock Markets Integrated with the Rest of the World

Paul Alagidede


Archive | 2008

Month-of-the-year and pre-holiday seasonality in African stock markets

Paul Alagidede


Archive | 2010

Persistence of Inflationary shocks: Implications for West African Monetary Union Membership

Paul Alagidede; Simeon Coleman; Juan Carlos Cuestas

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Ian Lange

University of Stirling

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Simeon Coleman

Nottingham Trent University

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Anokye M. Adam

University of Cape Coast

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